J.F. v. C.M.H.
This text of 881 P.2d 1116 (J.F. v. C.M.H.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.
Opinion
[1117]*1117 OPINION
J.F. and R.F. (the F.s) appeal the superior court’s determination that C.H.’s failure to support her child, J.M.F., was with justifiable cause, and that C.H.’s right to consent to the adoption had therefore not been terminated.
I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
C.H. placed her child, J.M.F., with her brother J.F. and sister-in-law R.F. two days after J.M.F.’s birth on June 1, 1988. At the time of placement both C.H. and the F.s contemplated that the F.s would adopt the child.
In November 1991, when J.M.F. was 3½ years old, C.H. demanded that the child be returned to her. During the time between
J.M.F.’s placement with the F.s and C.H.’s demand for return of the child, the F.s had not instituted a formal adoption. In January 1992, after the F.s refused to return J.M.F., C.H. filed a suit seeking custody of J.M.F. At the conclusion of the custody action the superior court awarded C.H. and the F.s joint custody, with C.H. to receive sole custody of J.M.F. in the autumn of 1994. In regard to this custody judgment the F.s appealed only from the award of attorney’s fees to C.H.1
While the parties were litigating C.H.’s custody action, the F.s, in a separate proceeding, filed a formal petition to adopt J.M.F. In their petition the F.s asserted that C.H.’s consent to their adoption of J.M.F. was not required, because she had failed, without justifiable cause, to support J.M.F. while the child was in the care of the F.s. See AS 25.23.050(a)(2)(B).2
At the adoption hearing the F.s argued that C.H. lacked justifiable cause for failing to support J.M.F. Although she had purchased food, clothing, and toys for J.M.F. while her child was with the F.s, C.H. did not provide regular financial support for the child, because the F.s did not ask for it, and because she assumed that the F.s would adopt the child and expect no support. The record establishes that the F.s never asked her for support on the same assumption. C.H. testified that she would have provided support had the F.s requested it.
The F.s also argued that C.H. had relied upon Yupik customs, under which parents may turn their children over to relatives for adoption with the understanding that the biological parents cannot later reclaim the children. The F.s contended that C.H. should not be able to use the law to force J.M.F.’s return while simultaneously relying on cultural practices to establish justifiable excuse for failure to support the child.3 C.H. had knowledge of such “cultural adoptions,” but the record does not indicate that she relied upon this custom. Instead, she testified that at all times that the F.s had J.M.F., she understood that they would “legally in court adopt” the child, and that “that was the ... adoption term we were using.” J.F. also testified that the F.s had intended to seek a decree of adoption from the Alaska courts, but had never followed through on this plan.
Applying the law for a formal statutory adoption, the superior court ruled that C.H. had justifiable cause for not providing support:
[N]o one on the [F.] side asked for or expected support from [C.H.], nor did [C.H.] feel obligated to pay support. ... The reason no support was paid was that everyone thought that [J.M.F.] was being adopted. That is the reason, and it is a justifiable reason.
[1118]*1118Beyond being merely justifiable, it would have been unusual, unexpected and probably contrary to the anticipated adoption if she had paid support. [C.H.] said that she would have been more than willing to pay support if asked. [R.F.] said it never came up because they were adopting and never expected [C.H.] to pay support. This justifies the lack of support as contemplated by Alaska Statute 25.23.050(a)(2)(B).
Accordingly, the superior court dismissed the F.s’ petition for adoption. The superior court expressly declined to reach the issue of whether ICWA preempted AS 25.23.-050(a)(2)(B). The F.s appeal from the superior court’s dismissal of their petition for adoption of J.M.F.
II. THE EFFECT OF AS 25.23.-050(a)(2)(B)
Consent to adoption is not required of “a parent of a child in the custody of another, if the parent for a period of at least one year has failed significantly without justifiable cause ... to provide for the care and support of the child as required by law or judicial decree.” AS 25.23.050(a)(2)(B); see also In re J.J.J., 718 P.2d 948, 953-54 (Alaska 1986).
The party seeking to terminate parental rights in connection with an adoption proceeding bears a high burden of proof. We have held that the petitioner for adoption must prove by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent failed to support the child. D.L.J. v. W.D.R., 635 P.2d 834, 838 (Alaska 1981). Once the petitioner has made this showing, the natural parent bears the burden of producing evidence of justifiable cause for his or her failure to support the child. Upon the natural parent’s introduction of such evidence, the petitioner must show by clear and convincing evidence that the natural parent’s failure to support was without justifiable cause. Id.
The long-established and continuing rule in Alaska is that absent the element of willfulness, a parent does not lose the right to consent under AS 25.23.050(a)(2). See, e.g., In re K.L.J., 813 P.2d 276, 281 & n. 5 (Alaska 1991). Here, the superior court relied upon the testimony of both C.H. and the F.s that the F.s did not expect support because they anticipated that they would formally adopt the child. Additionally, the superior court relied upon C.H.’s uncontrovert-ed testimony that she would have been more than willing to provide support had the F.s asked her to do so. This testimony is sufficient to establish that C.H.’s failure to support J.M.F. was not willful and thus that her failure to support J.M.F. was justifiable.4 It is the underlying agreement between C.H. and the F.s, to the effect that it was not anticipated that C.H. would support J.M.F. given the contemplated adoption, which negates any element of willfulness on C.H.’s part and demonstrates that her failure to support the child was not without justifiable cause.5 Thus we hold that none of the supe[1119]*1119rior court’s controlling findings of fact are clearly erroneous and that the superior court did not err in its determination that absent C.H.’s consent to the petition for adoption, the petition should be dismissed.6
AFFIRMED.7
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881 P.2d 1116, 1994 Alas. LEXIS 92, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jf-v-cmh-alaska-1994.